Saint Bonaventure

Saint Bonaventure, whose memorial is today in the Ordinary Form, received his (much delayed) doctorate in theology in Paris in 1257, in the same class as Saint Thomas Aquinas. Later that same year, he was elected Minister General of the Franciscan Order. Bonaventure spent much of his life as a theologian at the university, living in poverty as a Franciscan […]

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Saint Benedict and the Work of God

Today is the feast of Saint Benedict of Nursia, who can safely be said to be the father of western monasticism. His monastic Holy Rule, still followed today after almost 1,500 years, spread throughout the west as the Roman Empire collapsed. Pope Pius XII lauded him, for in the perilous times that followed Rome’s fall, it was Benedictine monks who […]

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My Lord and My God

Happy feast of Saint Thomas the Apostle! Today wasn’t always his feast. In fact in my Monastic Diurnal, today is the Memorial of Saints Processus and Martinian. His main feast was celebrated for centuries on 21 December, the day when tradition has it he was run though by spears, wielded by soldiers of a Greek-descended Indo-Parthian Satrap named Mazdai in […]

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Saint Irenæus: Doctor of Unity

A post-Protestant Non-Denominational Christian friend of mine has a particular fondness for that great Doctor of the Church, Saint Irenæus of Lyons, whose feast day is today. He occasionally quotes from the saint’s great work, Adversus Hæreses (Against Heresies), and he is particularly fond of the saint’s assertion that “the proper glory of God is man fully alive.” He refers […]

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John and Paul

On this day two Roman brothers named John and Paul were beheaded on the order of the Emperor Julian the Apostate. This would have been about the year 362, and within a century the veneration of these martyrs was so entrenched that their names were added to the Roman Canon – the First Eucharistic prayer. No, not these guys Yet, […]

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Saint John the Baptist

Today is the Solemnity of the Nativity of Saint John the Baptist. Since yesterday was Sunday, there was no opportunity to celebrate Saint John’s Eve, which is traditionally a time to light festive bonfires. The story of the Jewish people moves from Abraham through Exodus to the Judges to the Kings to the Prophets. It culminates in Christ, the culmination […]

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“I Die the King’s Good Servant, and God’s First”

Sir Thomas More(by Hans Holbein the Younger) Today is the memorial of one of my favourite saints, Saint Thomas More, who died at the hands of King Henry VIII (that villain). That is, today is his memorial in the modern Roman calendar, which he shares with Saint John Fisher, also executed by the same king. In my Benedictine ordo, however, […]

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Saint Romuald’s Brief Rule

In the Ordinary form of the Roman Rite, today is the memorial of Saint Romuald, abbot and founder of the Camaldolese monks. In my Benedictine breviary (and in the Eastern Churches), his feast is February 7. The explanation for the discrepancy may be found on Wikipedia, but briefly today is the anniversary of his death, while the February date is […]

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The Venerable Bede

Today in the calendar of the Ordinary Form of the Roman Rite is the feast of this blog’s patron, Saint Bede the Venerable. The venerable Saint Bede was a monk, priest, historian, and a Doctor of the Church, all while dealing with Viking attacks. I took the name Bede when I made my final oblation as a Benedictine. Saint Bede […]

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Saint Rita the Wounded

Saint Rita, whose feast is today, is sometimes known as the patron saint of lost and impossible causes. Married at a young age against her will to a terrible, abusive husband, by her prayers she gradually reformed him into a proper Christian husband. After his murder, she entered the convent. This wounded saint received the marks of Christ’s thorny wounds […]

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An Unexpected Calling

After the suicide of Judas Iscariot, the remaining Apostles gathered to choose another to replace him. They had some criteria: Therefore, it is necessary that one of the menwho accompanied us the whole timethe Lord Jesus came and went among us,beginning from the baptism of Johnuntil the day on which he was taken up from us,become with us a witness […]

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Our Lady of Fátima: Pray for Conversions, Pray for Peace

On this day in 1917, the Blessed Virgin began appearing to three shepherd children in Fátima, Portugal. She appeared on the thirteenth day of six consecutive months, culminating in the great Miracle of the Sun. Regardless of miracles, Catholics are not obliged to believe these “private revelations”. Indeed, the Church is very careful to investigate these sorts of claims with […]

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The Way

This is an excerpt from my journal, dated eleven years ago today. God’s communications with us humans are often subtle. As the Prophet Elijah discovered, the Voice of God is often to be found in the whispering wind (1 Kings 19:11-13). Sometimes, however, God reaches out and whacks us upside the head, either physically or mentally. Often times, I tell […]

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